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THIS SUMMER Don Bowie (Canada) and Alexey Bolotov (Russia) return to the the Gasherbrum mountain range in Baltoro, Pakistan. The two alpinists will decide on particular objectives based on specific conditions in the region, and have secured a few seperate permits to keep their options open. Of the 6 main peaks comprising the Gasherbrum massive, 4 are of interest to Don and Alexey:
GASHERBRUM I (also known as Hidden Peak or K5) is the 11th highest peak on Earth, located on the Pakistan-China border in Gilgit-Baltistan region of Pakistan. Gasherbrum I is part of the Gasherbrum massif, located in the Karakoram region of the Gasherbrum is often claimed to mean "Shining Wall", presumably a reference to the highly visible face of the neighboring peak Gasherbrum IV; but in fact it comes from "rgasha" (beautiful) + "brum" (mountain) in Balti, hence it actually means "beautiful mountain."
GASHERBRUM II (also known as K4) is the 13th highest mountain on Earth, located on the border of Pakistan occupied Kashmir - China. Gasherbrum II is the third highest peak of the Gasherbrum massif, located in the Karakoram range of the Himalaya.
GASHERBRUM III, at 7952m (26,088ft), and GASHERBRUM IV, at 7925m (26,000ft) are respectively the world's 15th- and 17th-highest peaks. Completely overlooked in the rush to the fourteen 8000m peaks, G3 has had only 2 ascents, both by the same route, which put 7 people on its summit; G4 is rather better known for its singular elegance and for its extreme difficulty, as a result of which its true summit has still seen only 9 pairs of feet (on 4 expeditions between 1958 and 1997)
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| Don Bowie (Canada) |
Alexey Bolotov (Russia) |
Archive >> July 2010
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31 Jul 2010 12:00 AM |
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Post Summit
by Don Bowie |
Many of you are wondering about my present state of health. This dispatch will address that as well as share a brief description of our summit of G1, descent, with some photos, and the obligatory ridiculousness which still seems resident even when I feel like crap… Total crap! The real start of the summit push began on the afternoon of July 27th. Joined now by Marty Schmidt, Libor Uher, and Radek Jaros, Alexey and I climbed from Camp 2 to Camp 3 and stopped there for a few hours, resting and drinking. At 7:30pm that evening the five of us strapped on our crampons and headed up into the night, knowing that a pending storm was forecast for the following afternoon. We carried no rope, climbing together but independently. We climbed through the night, taking turns breaking trail and sharing the workload. As daylight broke, we were struggling 200 meters below the summit in extremely deep, unconsolidated snow – but, we continued on regardless, fighting hard to gain ever meter. Finally the snow became bottomless, so we traversed/swam to a rock ridge on the far extreme right of the couloir, and climbed steep mixed rock, ice and snow to the false summit. There the summit ridge towered above us, looking rather ominous in the twilight and clouds. At 6:10am on July 28th, after 10 1/2 hours of climbing, Alexey and I, along with Radek Jaros, Libor Uher, and Marty Schmidt, finally reached the summit of G1. People at base camp reported a huge lenticular cloud on the summit at this time. It was definitely cold and windy, but I think it might have looked worse than it was….. Kinda. After taking the obligatory John Wayne and Pringles pictures, the five of us descended to Camp 3 with no issues. We rested there for a few hours, then continued down to Camp 2. At Camp 2 we were congratulated by the Koreans and Slovenians, then set up our tent and spent a very blustery night as the storm arrived full force. Alexey and I were both tired but happy and content, feeling pretty good. We even discussed descending further that day to Camp 1, but eventually decided against it and stayed at Camp 2 that night, the 28th. At 4:40am the next morning, Alexey and I awoke to the forecasted storm still raging against the tent. Visibility was very low, but we knew the winds would ease as we descended the icefall, so we brewed up, packed our camp and headed into the whiteout. We both felt good, but still tired, and stopped to take a few photos at our depot under the serac. After reaching Camp 1 we loaded up the entire camp into our packs, leaving nothing behind - just in case the monsoon storms would arrive before we could attempt something else. We discussed the option of trying GIII if the weather would hold up, and agreed we could easily carry gear and supplies back up from base camp if needed. Halfway down to base camp, we encountered the ever-widening crevasse field which required very careful navigation - believe me, it's getting really scary now. After making it through the delicate section, we could see in the distance the waving arms of our base camp crew. An hour later we arrived at the moraine, and together we walked down through the camps as one porter banged and empty kerosene can while singing a victory song on our behalf. Everyone, especially Alexey and I, were all smiles as climbers and cook staff all came out to greet us and congratulate us as we walked through camps. It was really cool. We finally sat down in the dining tent, ate some food, and shared a few toasts with the many visitors who came to discuss our climb and congratulate us. Full stop. I took a shower - the Pakistani glacier kind, which is essentially squatting on the moraine with a bucket of warm water and an old tin can. I returned to my tent to put on clean clothes and warm up a bit - and that's when it hit me like a bomb. Within 3 hours my body temperature was over 103F. I even double-checked it with a mercury thermometer because I couldn't believe it was that high. Throughout the evening my chest tightened severely, and I just couldn't breath, coughing up the most disgusting greenish flemmy stuff. My respiratory rate and heart rate skyrocketed, my O2 sats dropped. Jump to today: I am completely wiped-out, much more exhausted from fighting a high fever for 3 days immediately after summiting GI. This is certainly the most wicked chest infection I've ever had. A helicopter was dispatched the very first day of my illness due to my horrible vitals and condition. With help from the people at Travel Guard and Askari Aviation, hopefully I'll get flown down to a lower altitude as soon as there is a break in the clouds. Today's weather looks grim, so I'll just have to hack and wheeze away in my sleeping bag, downing antibiotics, etc. and dreaming of...well- every place but here. As of now my chest is still tight and my breathing very shallow...hack. wheeze. In an attempt to make you breathe equally as shallow, here's some photos from our grand exploration up G1. I promise to post more excellent images in the weeks to come, and keep you updated health and evac home. In case you haven't checked the news lately, Pakistan is in chaos...hack. wheeze. 
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29 Jul 2010 12:00 AM |
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Returned to base camp
by Webteam |
Don's Home Team Reports: Don phoned to say that he, Alexey, and all climbers who summited with him have returned safely to base camp.
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28 Jul 2010 12:00 AM |
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CONGRATULATIONS!!
by Webteam |
July 27, 2010, 7:45pm MST Don's Home Team Reports: Don called at 7:45 am (July 28) PKT to announce that he and Alexey along with Czech climbers Radek Jaros and Libor Uher and American climber Marty Schmidt have summited Gasherbrum I. Don reported that a storm was due to come in shortly, so they would not be long on the summit. He expected the return trip to base camp would be a long, arduous one due to inclement weather, deep, unstable snow, and tired climbers. However, at the moment, they were all elated to have accomplished their summit goal. Revisit Don's website again to read about the exciting details to this "summit story" when Don returns to base camp.
July 20, 2010 Saturday, July 17th, at 1:00am, Alexey and I awoke once again at Camp 3 on G1. The forecast for the mountain that day was to be almost perfect - if not a little cold - but low winds and no precipitation. We quickly ran through the morning rituals of alternating swinging arms through down jackets and pulling on boots in tandem. It's kinda like synchronized swimming - except at altitude, and not in a pool, and without those gross nose plug thingys, or the forced smiles. Come to think of it, it's not like synchronized swimming at all, but you get the picture - and it makes a pleasant visual reference for something not so pleasant. Shoveling down the usual handfuls of cereal - this time a chocolaty delight called "Milo" resembling dry dog food - we drank a cup of lukewarm water each, pulled our packs out of the frosty tent, and headed up once again into a black night. This time we would have company. The South American contingent had left 2 hours or so earlier, and we could see their headlamps as they danced against the icy slopes far above us. The dancing lights better resembled synchronized swimming than the tent thing. Never-mind. After the first steep step, we fell into a rhythm, our crampons crunching the hard snow beneath our feet as we climbed higher and higher, hour after hour. Just past the first rock ridge we caught up to one of the South Americans who joined in behind us, while another sat in the snow, obviously struggling with the altitude. An hour later the slopes turned blue in the morning twilight, and as we turned off our headlamps, we caught up to the rest of the climbers who had now reached the final long couloir, winding up and right toward the summit. The next few hours we climbed in a broken line amongst the Columbians and Brazilians, but none of us spoke much - we were all too busy focusing on every move. The snow was extremely hard in places, and it took careful concentration for tools and crampons. I kept thinking, "Better keep some in reserve for the way down, buddy. It's gonna take a little effort to reverse climb all this." By now all climbers but 3 had turned around, including one Columbian who was exploring a chute to the rocks above and right of us. Alexey and I climbed straight up, breaking trail through thigh deep snow for a few meters. We swapped out breaking trail a few times, until finally I reached snow depth about waist deep. The top layers broke between my legs and ice tools in near-perfect blocks, sliding below me on a layer about 30cm down. But it wasn't till I heard that all too familiar, throaty, "thunk" all around me - the disconcerting sound of snow layers settling, that I finally froze in my tracks. I think my stomach echoed the sound the snow made. I turned and looked down at Alexey. I'm sure the look in my eyes said it all. "This is bad". I stalled in the same spot, not moving for a few minutes, hoping the snow wouldn't notice me and forget I was there. I then swallowed hard and began traversing left toward the first serac, hoping to find something shallow and stable. No good. Alexey urged me to reverse my steps carefully. The avalanche conditions were definitely bad. I looked up to the ridge above and checked my altimeter; 7970 meters. With a (now different) sinking feeling in my chest, I thought to myself, "What? You've got to be kidding me! We're going to get stopped here? After all this?" I reversed down to Alexey. Alexey climbed down our trench as I followed, and then at a juncture began to climb back up and right, following the footsteps the Columbian climber who had made the attempt there earlier. As he started up the tracks, I surveyed the slopes above in the direction of the chute. The surface texture of the snow beside the rocks above was exactly the same as the slope I had just "checked my shorts" on. It would be bad beside the rocks also, I assumed. I called to Alexey my observations, but he wanted to check it out. The 2 Brazilians followed him. "OK. I shouted, I'm going to start heading down then, k? That slope is not for me."
The slope wasn't for Alexey, either. Shortly after reaching the first rocks he discovered chest-deep, unconsolidated snow - even more unstable than the first slope we tried. Soon after he retreated and we began the long descent back to Camp 3. So, we were close to the summit. How close? Check out the image of the summit ridge behind the Brazilian climber, and the 2nd image of the summit ridge rocks just above and out of reach beyond the end of the trench. So, I ask you, if there is only a few meters above you, have you reached the summit? And if yes, what is the relative cutoff of a "few" meters? Ten? Twenty? Thirty? Fifty? John Wayne once said about K2, "If you can't ride that thing like a pony, you ain't on top!" Ok...I just made up that John Wayne quote, but if John Wayne were ever a climber, he would have said that for sure. Imagine what Chuck Norris would say. ***Please submit your Chuck Norris quotes to info@calpinist.com. If you don't understand this, google "Chuck Norris Quotes".
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